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In the Name of Diversity

In the Name of Diversity
The departure of a popular Hispanic professor at Stanford spurs debate on whether universities should offer extra incentives to retain minority faculty.

By Veronica Mendoza

PALO ALTO, Calif.
When word spread around campus that Dr. Luis R. Fraga, a 15-year associate professor in Stanford University’s political science department, was considering a job offer at another university, students circulated a petition to retain the popular Hispanic professor. In December, students and alumni presented the “Keep Professor Fraga at Stanford” petition, with 1,000 signatures, to university administrators, urging them to offer him incentives to stay.

“It is important to have a Latino professor,” says Stanford alum Lizet Ocampo. “When you see someone like you who has achieved so much, it does help students who are Latino.”

An article in the school newspaper about the petition sparked  debate about whether institutions should offer retention incentives to prominent minority faculty like Fraga. According to Stanford’s Web site, approximately 3 percent of its faculty are Hispanic.

“It is both racist and insulting the way some people pushing the ‘Keep Fraga’ petition regularly cite the fact that Prof. Fraga is non-White as a primary reason why the university should do everything it can to make sure he stays at Stanford,” wrote one student in an online forum.

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